Subscriber Content Read Preview
Syria calls President Obama's bluff on WMD.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
A small Alaska town, a gravel road, and a hostile Washington.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
A case study in New York and Las Vegas union politics.
HOUSES OF WORSHIP
By Jennifer Graham
Barred from the chaotic scene of the bombing, priests nonetheless found ways to provide solace.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
By Tevi Troy
Why China and the U.S. may be better equipped today for a pandemic than a decade ago.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
By Melanie Kirkpatrick
Pyongyang has admitted abducting Japanese citizens. Was a missing Brigham Young student also seized?
Subscriber Content Read Preview
By Anne Jolis
Animal-rights activists launch a rodent rescue—and set back research that might help cure Alzheimer's or autism.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
BOOKSHELF
By Matthew Kaminski
Half a continent was waking from a long sleep and finally looking at its bloody past.
A video series produced by the Hoover Institution.
The Stanford economist explains why this recovery is so slow.
The Wisconsin reformer takes on ObamaCare.
The Texas Republican shakes up the Senate.
News Corp.'s chairman and CEO is splitting the company.
OUTSIDE THE BOX
By Pete du Pont
Our returns don't have to be this unhappy.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
By Mary Kissel
Senator Tom Harkin cancels a subcommittee hearing to silence a witness harmed by Labor Secretary nominee Tom Perez's legal quid pro quo.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
By Allysia Finley
Another brilliant idea from California progressives
Subscriber Content Read Preview
By Jason L. Riley
A House report on the Libya consulate attacks points fingers
By James Taranto
Do female Ivy League graduates have a "duty" to work outside the home?
Tuesday 4:33 p.m. ET
By Nir Boms
There are many stories behind the daily death tolls, and too few are told. The country's catastrophe will not end on its own.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Echoes of Mark Twain are neither accidental nor incidental in this coming-of-age story starring Matthew McConaughey, who gives the best performance of his career.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Were the president's plans for the war hobbled by his administration's own infighting? James Traub reviews Vali Nasr's "The Dispensable Nation."
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Subscriber Content Read Preview
By Mary Kissel
Senator Tom Harkin cancels a subcommittee hearing to silence a witness harmed by Labor Secretary nominee Tom Perez's legal quid pro quo.
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Subscriber Content Read Preview
Pepper...and Salt
Subscriber Content Read Preview
By Scott Whitlock
From the Media Research Center
Subscriber Content Read Preview
A transcript of the weekend's program:
The case for gridlock. Plus Democrats stymie gun-control efforts, and Beyoncé and Jay-Z go to Cuba. Tune in this weekend for more: FOX News Channel, Saturday 2 p.m. and Sunday 3 p.m. ET.
The Journal Editorial Report Podcast.
(This iTunes link is compatible with Internet Explorer 7, Safari and Firefox browsers.)
We speak for free markets and free people, the principles, if you will, marked in the watershed year of 1776 by Thomas Jefferson's Declaration of Independence and Adam Smith's "Wealth of Nations." So over the past century and into the next, the Journal stands for free trade and sound money; against confiscatory taxation and the ukases of kings and other collectivists; and for individual autonomy against dictators, bullies and even the tempers of momentary majorities.